12 |]JH Reddii^iSr^rafii\,anjj, Q l| jj\e Jja&jKj ]W|| , m ij The Real | i! Han j: | BT lii |: J FRANCIS LYNDE \\ j 1 ii ii <i 1 > o 1 * * 1• * > 1 > o 1 > o ' I HUtrtU Vy IRWIH HTEtS | ! i ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦•♦!% , Copyright by Cbue. Scrlbner'e Ova* '(Continued) Starbuck was frowning sourly. "Suppose you make it a case of sus pended judgment, Doc," he suggest ted. "The few of us here who know ; anything about It are giving John ithe benefit of the doubt. They'll have i to show me, and half a dozen of us, before they can send him over the i road." "He knew they were after him?" "Sure thing:; and he had all the i chance he needed to make his get -away. He was shot while he was jtrying to get between and stop the ■war and keep others from getting ikilled." "It's a pity," said the surgeon, glancing across at the police cap tain to whom Colonel Baldwin was appealing. "They'll put him in the ! hospital cell at the jail, and that will jcost him whatever slender chance the might otherwise have to pull through." Starbuck looked up quickly. "Tell "em he can't be moved, Doc Dan," he urged suddenly. And then: w 'You're Dick Maxwell's family phy fcician, and Colonel Dexter's, and (mine. Surely you can do that much J for us?" BE CANNY— ' Everybody can! Put your spare £time into cans and jars. Home canning is kitchen patriot ism. Don't have an empty preserving jar in your neighborhood next fall. If you have more preserving jars . than you can fill, lend them to a .neighbor who will make them worn .for the nation. Some neighbor surely can eat or put up surplus products from your place. A quart of canned peaches or tomatoes on the shelf is worth a bushel rotting on the ground. See that tha shelves in your pre serving closet sag just a little this year. Weeding will seem easy next winter when mother serves those home-canned string beans. Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton f r T""HERE is something very I dainty and attractive about this little frock, yet it is absolutely simple withal. There is just the straight skirt that is hemmed and tucked and gath ered, but the pretty little bodice that is cut in points gives a very novel touch. The ribbon that is passed through slits at the waist line hints of the Empire and always the Empire line is becoming to the little girls. If you prefer you can make long sleeves, but most mothers and most children will like the short ones for the present season. For the 6-year size will be needed, 2% yards of material The pattern No. 9425 is cut in sizes from 4 to 8 years. It will be mailed to any address by 042S Child's Dress, 4 to 8 years. the Fashion Department of this Price 10 cents. paper, on receipt of ten cents. ARE you fond of a good Ginger Ale ? If so, try „ a case of our special brand. Its exceptionally . fine flavor and bouquet make it the equal of any r Ginger Ale on the market, imported or domestic. \And the price is far more reasonable. We also handle Hires, in bottles, universally f popular. Just the beverage you should have in your ice-box always. Hires is genuine because I it is actually made from real roots, barks, herbs V and berries. It is just as wholesome as it is de | licious. I' Remember—all our products are bottled under most sanitary conditions in a clean, up-to-date plant. We invite your inspection. THE D. BACON CO. 431 S. Cameron St. THURSDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service By 1 COME NOV/ - DON'T BE OOVN ANSWER m WHICH THE Pit?t<£HT W'' CLAO-.TO THE MOUTH-LOOK ON ME A ? 1 | "I can, and I will," said the sur geon promptly. Three days after the wholesale ar rest at the dam, Brewster gossip had fairly outworn itself telling and re telling the story of how the High I-rtne charter had been saved; of how Crawford Stanton's bold ruse of hir ing an ex-train robber to imperson ate a federal court officer had fallen through leaving Stanton and his confederates, ruthlessly abandoned by the unnamed principals, languish ing bailless in jail; or how Smith, the hero of all these occasions, was still lying at the point of death in the office shack at the construction camp and David Kinzie, once more in keen pursuit of the loaves and fishes, was combing the market for odd shares of the stock, which was now climb ing swiftly out of reach. But at this climax of exhaustion—or safety— came a distinctly new set of thrills, more titillating, if possible, than all the others combined. It was on the morning of the f third day that the Herald announce'd the return of Mr. Joseph Richlander from the Topaz; and in the mar riage notices of the same issue the breakfast table readers of the news papers learned that the multimil lionaire's daughter had been private ly married the previous evening to Mr. Tucker Jibbey. Two mining speculators were chuckling over the news in the Hophra House grill when a third man came in to join them. "What's the joke?" queried the newcomer; and when he was shown the marriage item, he nodded grave ly. "That's all right; but the Herald man didn't get the full flavor of it. It was a sort of running match, it seems; the fond parent wasn't in- i vited or consulted." "I don't see that the fond parent has any kick coming," said the one who had sold Jibbey a promising prospect hole on Topaz mountain two days earlier. "The young fellow's g>ot all konds of money." I "I know," the land broker put in.! "But they're whispering it around ! that Mr. Richlander had other plans J for his daughter. They also say that 1 Jibbey wouldn't stay to face the j music; that he left on the midnight j ' train last night a few hours after | the wedding, so as not to be among those present when the old man should blow in." "What?"—in a chorus of two —i "left his wife?" "That's what they say. But that's only one of the new and startling things that isn't in the morning pa pers. Have you heard about Smith? —or haven't you been up long enough yet?" "I heard yesterday that he was be ginning to mend," replied the break faster on the left. "You're out of date," this from the dealer in ranches. "You know the story that was going around about his being an escaped convict, or something of that sort? It gets its 'local color' this morning. There's a sheriff here from back East some where—came in on the early train; name's Macauley, and he's got the requisition papers. But Smith's fool ed him good and plenty." Again the chorus united in an eager query. "How?" "He died last night—a little past midnight. They say they're going to bury him out at the dam—on the job that he pulled through and stood on its feet. One of Williams' quarry men drifted in with the story just a little while ago. I'm here to bet you even money that the whole town goes to the funeral." "Great gosh!" said the man who was crunching the burnt bacon. "Say, that's tough, Bixby! I don't care what he'd run away from back East; he was a man, right. Harding has been telling everybody how Smith wouldn't let the posse open fire on that gang of hold-ups last Friday night; how he chased across on the dam stagings alone and unarmed to try to serve the warrants on 'em and make 'em stop firing. It was glorious but it wasn't war." To this the other mining- man add ed a hard word. "Dead," he gritted: "and only a few hours earlier the girl had taken snap judgment on him and married somebody else! That's the woman of it!" "Oh, hold on, Stryker," the ranch broker protested. "Don't you get too fierce about that. There are two strings to that bow, and the longest and shortest one runs out to Colonel Baldwin's place on Little creek, I'm thinking. The Richlander business was only an incident. Stanton told me that much." (To Be Continued) COLUMBIA BOY IX FRANCE Marietta, Pa., July 12.—Raymond Simpson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jon athan Simpson, of Columbia, is now with the Marines in France. The parents received a notification of his safe arrival. STOVERDALE FESTIVAL Stoverdale, Pa., July 12.—0n Sat urday evening the annual ice cream and cake festival of the Stoverdale Sunday school will be held, at the schoolhouse, if the weather permits. Daily Dot Puzzle __ ISL 7 °" ' * 9 r\- y,O KyV" 1 i| '\ 14 •u* is * is 35 A * jT ; 6* •S* .W * s 47. 44 •".27 ,2^/9 58- 4a.* 38 .32 54." Eighty lines and then s:x more Brings a to the door. Draw from one to two and so on to the end. HARRISBURG BS6itt TELEGRAPH | BOOKS | "Pros and Cons of the Great War," by Leonard Magnus, which E. P. I Dutton & Co. have recently pub j lished, brings together in compact form with the greatest conciseness of statement the arguments for and | against the various incidents, phases J and developments of the conflict. The author describes it as "a com- I pila'ion of opinions" and says that the arguments "are stated primarily from the foreign point of view." The material has ben drawn in the main \ from German and other foreign I sources, with occasional reference to official documents, and the book is | dedicated "To the Enemy," with a text from II Samuel, "Thy mouth | hath testified against thee." I "Yes, it is a fact that without any I form of control it is possible that we may be bare of breadstuffs in the last three months of next year," says Herbert Hoover. "Without regulation." says Alfred W. McCann, food expert, in his book, "Thirty-cent Bread," Just pub j lished by the George H. Doran Com pany. "we shall have bread cards I ana soup kitchens within a year." Great minds think alike some times! Is the inverse true? And, if so, does it account for the log-jam of food (and all other) legislation in l Congress to-day? The plot and characters of Mr. Phlllpott?' new novel, "The Banks of Colne," published by Macmillan, are drawn from two intensely interest ing industries of the Devonshire country—a great flower nursery and landscape gardening concern, and the oyster fisheries on the coast. The story develops in a leisurely way with the remarkable descrip tions of nature which have charac terized all of Mr. Phillpotts' writ ings. The people are real. They have grown lip out of the soil on which they play out their little drama, and the natural settings seem to envelope and color their souls. This quality Is partly a result of Mr. Phillpotts' way of working. Hi goes to the locality which is to be the scene of his story, and there he lives among the people, getting to know them Intimately and dis covering the fundamental relations between them and the background. From the very start "The Banks of Colne" is filled with unusual situa tions, and though the climax caraes as a startling surprise, it is both dramatic and natural, the inevitable result of evil doing in one case and a wrong judgment in a great crisis of love and devotion In the other. Built Church Fropi Old Paving Stones East St. Louis, 111. The remain ing $750 of a debt of $20,000 incurred by the Winstanley Baptist Church here, when it built an edifice out of discarded paving- stones three years ago has been paid. , The Rev. E. W. Reeder was going to St. Louis on a street car when he saw laborers tearing the paving stones out of Broadway, in this city. He had desired for some time to build a new church, but money was lacking. He conceived the idea of using the discarded stones. They were bought from the city for a small sum. The new church was built by mem bers of its congregation and Mr. Reed er. The latter donned overalls and directed the work. It required eight months to complete the structure. The site and the building cost a total of SB,OOO. Uncle Sam's Thrift Thought For To-day What are yiu going to do -with that hali' bottle of left-over milK in your refrigerator, Madam Housewife? The cream has been taken oft but there iJ good food value in what is left. Here is one possibility, says the U. S Department of Agricul ture, for a nourishing dish for either luncheon or supper:' N'ou 'ishing Milk Gravy (Enough for family of two adults and three children. Re duce proportions if for smaller number.) 1 pint skim milk. Vi cup flour. 2 level teaspoons butter or cooking fat. % teaspoon salt. Melt butter or other fat in saucepan. Adl flour and salt mixed. Add milk grad ually. Heat, stirring constantly until thick. Flavor, if desired, with any left-over rimced meat or fish which may be on hand, or minced ham or a slice of broiled bacon, crumbled. Serve on boiled hominy, samp, rice, potatoes, macaroni, or slices of corn or other bread, or toast. All's Well That * Ends Well M How One Family Moved I: Their Neighbor: By JAXE McLEAN. Human nature is a funny thing. Sometimes one never knows what it is one really wants until some one else voices a desire for it. Mrs. Per kins never knew that she wanted to move into the country until her life long friend, Mrs. Starr, that she was going. The Petßns J family had lived next door toßhe Starrs for many years. Mrs. Permns and Mrs. Starr were fast friends, the children had grown up together, family problems of finance had been openly discussed between them, and now the Starrs had amassed enough money to take a house in the sub- j urbs. It -wasn't exactly the fact that ! Mrs. Perkins was going to miss Mrs. j Starr, for miss her she would, but it was listening to the wonderful in ducements set forth by the real es tate agent, and knowing that there wasn't sufficient capital in the Per kins coffer to permit of going with their neighbors. "I shall miss you so much,' Mrs. Perkins said, wiping a stray tear from her eye on the day that she saw the last of her neighbor. "Life ! is going to be so strange without; you." "Oh. you will be coming along out yourself before long," Mrs. Starr re turned confidently. And the two women kissed, and promised to see each other often. "The latch string will always be out for the Perkins family out at Wood Crest," called Mrs. Starr as she said good-by for the last time. But Mrs. Perkins knew that it would be a long time before they could afford to buy a house in the suburbs, even on the easy payment basis. That night she was very quiet. The children made the same hubbub that they always made at the even ing meal, and Dave Perkins looked across at his wife understandingly, a tender look in his tired eyes. "Guess we're going to miss them; Eh. Jennie. But cheer up, we're all well and we have each other." And Mrs. Perkins could not help but respond to this. She was not a selfish woman and not for the world would she have had her husband suspect that it was because they couldn't move to the suburbs, too, that she was so downcast and for lorn. Time passed and the Starrs slowly got settled. Mrs. Perkins went out to spend the day one Saturday and took the children with her. Mr. Perkins was to come out with Mr. Starr on the late train. The little house was all that it had promised to be. Set in a small square of gar den it was small, but it had a wide veranda, and all the little modern at tachments like casement windows and winding stairs that are unknown to the ordinary city apartment. Mrs. Perkins fancied that Mrs. Starr looked a little tired as she wel comed them, but she put this down to getting settled, and after the chil dren had run out to play the two women sat down together in the cozy living room. "It's lovely," sighed Mrs. Perkins, "Just what I imagined it would be. Imagine having a bedroom with four windows, and this room is so sweet, the entire place is perfect. And your veranda, how I do envy sitting out there in the evening." Mrs. Starr smiled. "Yes, it's all lovely," she admitted, "but there are drawbacks, Jennie, that I never knew about. For one thing, the ver anda has to be screened and as we did not think of that we shall have to pay for it ourselves. Then things are much higher here than they are in the city and John is tired out every night after that stuffy trip down. I don't sleep well, either; there are dogs that bark all night and chickens that begin when they leave off. Oh, it isn't all as splendid ar we had thought. Of course, we like it, and we're not at all sorry that we did it, but I hope these discom forts are not going to last." Mrs. Perkins laughed. "Of course they won't last," she said brightly. Good Health good appetite, good spirits— mean no discord in the body. To keep the organs in har mony—when there is need—use BEECHAMTS PILLS lartOTt Sale at Amj MadUu bffcaWorlt Seldmirwhm labexca. 10c^?~a. into the Country and What s Thought of It "You're just tired out from getting: settled. It's always that way after you move." But somehow she felt more satisfied than she had for a long time. If there were really darwbacks about moving into the country, she could accept her own fate with less reluctance. They all had a pleasant day. The two men came down for dinner and there was much fun and laughter at the cheery dinner table. "Tou people will be moving down here yourselves, before long," said genial John Starr, as the Perkinses prepared to go. Dave Perkins shook his head. "Well, it isn't all as rosy as we had expected," Starr returned. "This commuting is an awful nuisance. I had no idea it would bother me so. And I have to get up so much ear lier in the morning, too." The Perkins children were tired out when, after the train ride, they reached their own home. Somehow the apartment looked very cozy to Jennie Perkins, and, after all, the country was lonely. "I don't like the country," said small Jerry, disdainfully, as he was getting ready for bed. "Neither do I," returned his sister. "I'm glad we don't have to live down there." And as their mother heard the en suing conversation she smiled a lit tle and murmured to herself. Every thing has come out for the best." ing skin with V) Resinol The moment that Resinol Oint ment touches itching skin the itch ing usually stops and healing begins. That is why doctors prescribe it so successfully even in severe cases of eczema, ringworm, rashes, and many other tormenting, disfiguring skin diseases. Aided by warm baths with Resinol Soap, Resinol Ointment makes a sick skin or scalp healthy, cuickly, easily and at little cost. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap also greatly help to clear away pimplea and dan druff. Sold by all druggists. lyuMujiiiiiimiiiiiilllllllll Preserves skin and complexion fjL indefinitely. Retains the ■y r?/ Beauty of Youth when A. >_/ youth is but a memory. Cr Your appearance will always be the wonder of your friends if you use Gouraud's Oriental Cream Send 10c. (or Trial Size FERD T. HOPKINS & SON. New York imiiiiiiiiiimniiiiimiiiiiiiiii EDUCATIONAL. School of Commerce Troup Building, 15 S. Market Square Noted for thorough training in Bubiness and Stenegraphy. Wonder ful demand for Bookkeepers and Stenographers. CIVIL SERVICE COURSE Be Patriotic —Save Time—Begin Now School Open All Summer OUR OFFER— Right Training by Specialists and High-Grade Posi tions. You take a Business Courso but Once. The BEST la What You Want. Bell 485 Cumberland 4303 Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31 at Year 82e Market St. HarMabnrv, Pa. JUtY 12, 1917. Dangerous Gas and Acids That Hurt the Stomach—Sour the Food Cause Dyspepsia, Indigestion Recommends A Safe Way To Treat Stomach Trouble At Home. Many stomach sufferers who are always full of jras and whose stom achs burn with acid after nearly every meal think these thinjrs are the RESULT of indigestion when in reality they are the CAUSE. It is just as foolish to give arti ficial digestents such as pepsin, etc.. to a stomach full of gas and acid as it would be for a man who had stepped on a tack to rub limiment on his foot without removing the tack. Some stomachs generate too much gas and acid. Gas distends the stomach walls causing a full, bloated oppressive feeling while the acid irritates and inflames the lining of the stomach. Naturally the food ferments and sours, digestion is often delayed and stomach mis ery is the result. Artificial digest- ■ Up the Hudson WIIIOwGfOVC EXCURSION West Point Sunday, July 15th $3.50 | Special Excursion Train 1 j From Fare i I Hnrrlnbure ........ $2.50 0.00 Saturday, July 14 rrrr :::::: X S ' " Hernliey ... 2.50 6.27 ! Palmyra 2.50 6.35 Annvllle 2.50 6.45 SPECIAL TRAIN Lebanon 2.50 6.57 Willow Grove, arrive 10.15 From Lv.A.M. Returning, Special Train will HnrrUbur* 3.55 'j™ V.h" n* o ""' "' o ° * Hum me Into wn 4.10 motions. Heruhe" 4iis Free Concert Afternoon and Palmyra 4.124 TT _ _ Annviiie 4.82 Evening Jer.ey City (arrive) 0.15 CONWAY AND HIS BAND ■* ' PEA COAL J. B. Montgomery Third and Chestnut Both Phones The Federal Machine Shop COURT AND CRANBERRY STS. We have Just opened a General Repair and Machine Shop at the above address. We are specially equipped to do grinding, bicycle, automobile and general machine repairing. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED Interesting—lnstructive- Educational—Historic A few copies of the recently published "History of the City Grays and Allied Organizations"—bound in cloith—3B pages —numerous pictures and portraits. SI.OO per volume. THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. Printing, Binding, Designing, Photo Engraving, Die Stamping, Plate Printing HARRISnrRG, PA. • ents will push this sour, ferment ing mass into the intestines and so relieve the stomach pain but the acid still remains in the stomach to generate more gas and produce more trouble at the next meal. If you are using digestive aids after meals drop them for a while and instead get a few 5-grain tab lets of pure bisurated magnesia from Geo. A. Gorgas or any drug gist and take two with each meal. Bisurated Magnesia does not digest food but will neutralize the exces sive acid in your stomach, keep the food sweet and will drive the gas and bloat right out of your body. As Magnesia is prepared in various forms he sure to get Bisurated Magnesia for this purpose as it is not a laxative and in this refined form will not injure the stomach in any way.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers